By George Scialabba
Foreign Affairs - March/April 2015 Issue
One of the most fruitful ideas to emerge from twentieth-century
social theory is Max Weber’s notion of the “iron cage” of purposive
rationality. Weber argued that once some principle of
organization—market competition, say, or ideological orthodoxy—has
achieved dominance in the spheres of production and governance, the rest
of a society’s institutions find themselves gradually but inexorably
adopting the same principle. In an ideology-dominant society, everything
fluid turns to stone; in a market-dominant society, everything solid
melts into air.
Not everything, of course. The iron cage is, like most other useful
theoretical notions, an ideal type. All societies retain protected (or
neglected) spaces where not-yet-rationalized traditions and communities
flourish. Still, although the mills of rationalization turn slowly, they
grind exceedingly fine. In time, Weber believed, every practice or
institution in a modern society, regardless of its original purpose,
experiences an irresistible pressure to adapt to the society’s
fundamental organizing principle.
That’s one way to understand the story told by Excellent Sheep,
William Deresiewicz’s important jeremiad on the deterioration of higher
education in the United States. Deresiewicz chronicles how in recent
decades U.S. colleges and universities have reflected and reinforced the
ascendance of neoliberalism, which has served as the organizing
principle of American society for the past 30 years or so. Deresiewicz,
who taught English at Yale for ten years before leaving academia in
2008, laments the way that U.S. universities have replaced the
traditional quest for liberal enlightenment with the goals and demands
of late capitalism: consumer sovereignty, labor-market flexibility, debt
financing, “scientific” management and marketing, and technologically
driven increases in productivity. Universities have gone from nourishing
their students’ spirits to facilitating their careers—especially
careers in finance and consulting.
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